09 February 2013

“A folk high school becomes what it is
because of the individuals of which it is made. Learning happens across social
positions and differences – the teacher learns from the student and vice versa
in a living exchange and mutual teaching. For Grundtvig dialogue across
differences was essential – the ideal was that people must learn to bear with
the differences of each other before enlightenment can be realized.”

N F S Grundtvig was the pioneer of the idea of the “Folk
High School”, the first of which was established by some of his followers, in
Denmark, in 1844.

The Danish Folk High Schools continue to flourish up to
today and are now more numerous than ever.

As we would expect, Denmark’s history is both different and
similar to that of other countries.

In step with other Western European continental countries,
Denmark passed through two major transitions: abolition of serfs, co-incident
with the French revolution in the late 18th Century; and institution
of bourgeois democracy, co-incident with the widespread revolutions of 1848.

Insofar as these were unilateral reversals of previous power
and property relations, they were violent. But Danes are apt to say that they
never had any revolutions; by which they mean that the bloodshed and carnage
that accompanied revolutionary change elsewhere, was absent in the case of
Denmark.

Denmark moved, in the 19th Century, from being an
extremely divided population of which the larger part was rural, uneducated,
poor and insecure, to being a modern and much more homogenous society of
near-universal literacy.

Denmark became a nation, in the sense of the word “nation”
that we in South Africa use when we speak of nation-building, which is to say
both democratic, and educated. Or, we might more pointedly say: educated, and
thereby democratic.

For the purposes of this CU course on Education, the most
remarkable, typical characteristic of the Folk High School is that there is no
prior educational requirement for entry to the school, and no “qualifications”
are issued by the school. This is also how the Communist University works: no
entry barrier, and no certificate on exit.

The Danish Folk High Schools did not, and still do not,
replace formal education, and did not compete with it or diminish formal
education in any way. Quite to the contrary, the informal Folk High Schools
complement the formal academic establishment in an entirely benevolent and
beneficial manner. This complementarily was part of Grundtvig’s intention when
he wrote of the “School for Life”.

What the Folk High Schools did in total was to provide a way
in which the level of education among the entire population could be raised in
the present time. The formal education system alone could not do this.

Formal education is by nature compartmentalised. Each topic
stands apart from all of the others. Formal education as such is predominately
confined mainly the early years of life. The vast provision of resources to
formal education must of necessity be concentrated in this way.

This being the case, and in the absence of any other
process, it becomes a matter of wishful thinking, or else of resignation to a
process lasting many generations, to speak of a general raising of the
educational level, if no other thing is done.

In South Africa, the formal education system is fully
developed and all children are enrolled for entry to school. The system does
produce engineers, doctors and other professionals, sufficient for the
country’s needs. But the drop-out rate is enormous, and even of those who
complete schooling, a large proportion remain functionally illiterate and
innumerate.

In short, the formal educations system is failing to raise
the general level of education in the country. This has been the case for
generations past, and although there change for the better in the system, yet
those who have been and are still being abandoned are many.

Common expressions of desire for “life-long learning” in
South Africa are not matched by corresponding practical provisions, most of the
time. Employers are often reluctant to provide

The strong faith in formal education that exists in
bureaucratic and in political circles in South Africa, has up to now driven
down all attempts to establish informal and general educational initiatives,
whether on the lines of the Danish Folk High Schools, or any other.